Widget development for TV and for us all

The recent agreement between Yahoo and Samsung is very interesting for us tech guys. Will we be able to create new applications (and make money) for TV?  Will this extend the reach of YouTube and create more market for others in the same market (like Joost, etc.) and even for other companies (like Microsoft, Facebook, etc.)?

The answer for me for both questions is yes, although I think that this will take time to accomplish because we have many TV brands (with different hardware and software) and widget platforms (from Yahoo, Google, Facebook, etc.) and  they also need to come on board and make agreements between them.

But if we start to see many different APIs (one for each TV/widget platform) we will be faced with a problem because the effort to build óur killer application will significantly increase. A OpenSocial like effort would speed up things to the benefit of us all.

Why are we so afraid to move to the Cloud?

Every remembrance that I have from a usual visit to my bank in the nineties, when I had started managing my own (small) bank account, always begins with a large standing queue.  But, suddenly, everything changed, and my dark remembrances were transformed into an “easy as click” sensation.

This new “click experiences” didn’t  have an easy start as I now remember it. In the begining, I had the same doubts and fears as everyone had. To have private information on the Web, especially the one’s regarding financial situation,  accessible to everyone, was a “terrifying” sensation. This “terrifying” sensation was always in opposition to the excitement of having a powerful personal finance managing application, and more, an application that we could used everywhere and on every scenarios – being on vacation and have the possibility to pay a bill that we had forgotten; making a last hour stock action’s investment; make a bank transfer to a friend; etc.

Those scenarios were, in fact,  very exciting, but as I vividly remember, the fear from losing the control over this new powerful application, and consequently, lose the control of our personal finances was always evermore present.

And how did this end? How has this incremental fear stopped? The answer is obviously not simple, but definitely, it must be related with reputation and trust links, I’ve already talked about that in a previous post. In this example, the solid reputation that the banks had,  together with a large development in security technologies,  were fundamental to create the trust links and to allow a phenomenal development in the home banking applications field.

And now, why are we so afraid to move to the Cloud? Why don’t we let ourselves be embraced by the power of having all our applications on the Web, not only our personal finances’ application, but all of them? My simple answer is: We don’t know what is the Cloud, or even, what is the Cloud is made of.

We must first realise that the Cloud is a group of services providers, like our bank an its home bank application. We must realise that, and then wait to see how these new service providers will construct their reputation and  how that reputation will be able to enhance our trust feeling.

I can now say that we should consider home banking as pre-historical Cloud Computing and an example to follow.

PS:
We are in an era where the banks’ reputation is not what it was back then, although this is completely out of the scope of this post, I think that this is something that will change. It must. Without this thing called reputation we won’t have the trust that has made possible this pre-historical Cloud Computing…

AWS Management Console – power to the users

Amazon has recently introduced its management console to the EC2 platform. This is a major step forward and gives users real power and control over the EC2 infrastructure. This console not only provides the tools to manage all virtual EC2 instances, but also gives access to a large group of AMIs ( Amazon Machine Images) built by the AWS community.

Quote from the AWS site:

“…The AWS Management Console gives you a quick, global picture of your cloud computing environment so that you can see what resources you’re operating and conveniently manage those resources…”

Although this is a real step forward, this seems that Amazon guys still have a lot of problems to solve, the most relevants are the security of its access control infrastructure, and also the dependencies over the quality of users’ network (Internet Access).

CloudAve have also good points about this: http://www.cloudave.com/link/amazon-web-services-makes-it-easy-for-the-hackers-oops-users

AMD plans supercomputer with 1,000 GPUs

Quoting a news article from CustomPC:

«AMD’s president, Dirk Meyer, revealed the plans for the supercomputer, called the Fusion Render Cloud, at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES). The colossal machine will be powered by AMD Phenom II processors and 790 motherboard chipsets, along with over 1,000 Radeon HD 4870 GPUs.
The company claims that one purpose of the system is to ‘deliver video games, PC applications and other graphically-intensive applications through the Internet “cloud” to virtually any type of mobile device with a web browser.’ The idea is that the Fusion Render Cloud will do all the hard work, so all you need is a machine capable of playing back the results, saving battery life and the need for ever greater processing power.
AMD also says that the Fusion Render Cloud will ‘enable remote real-time rendering of film and visual effects graphics on an unprecedented scale.’ Meanwhile, game developers would be able to use the supercomputer to quickly develop games, and also ‘serve up virtual world games with unlimited photo-realistic detail.’
»

Although the concept is not new, this seems to be a interesting move from AMD. The main problem to be addressed and necessarily solved is latency (the time delay between the rendering on the supercomputer and presenting the image on the remote client), which depends mostly on external factors…

Cloud player acquired by SUN

In my my first post I asked the question “What new applications will it bring?” but as many as you know, at this time we are already seeing new applications to pop up.

One of them is QLayer that sells Virtual Private DataCenter (VPDC). SUN has acquired it recently so the interest in the cloud keeps growing.

Geeks and entrepreneurs, its time to build your cloud company and offer yourselfs to big players!!